Non-state transfers
Non-state transfers is a term usually used to describe transactions of weapons or other goods - material or non-material - where neither party involved is a government. This is in contrast to the usual practice of arms sales, where a government purchases arms from another government or from private industry. This is also in contrast to situations where a government may provide arms to a non-state actor, such as a separatist movement or terrorists.
Examples of non-state transfers could include theft from the military of a sovereign state, sale by a private individual of government goods which do not legally belong to him, and a variety of other black market activities.
Many attempts at international arms control, such as the Chemical Weapons Convention, Biological Weapons Convention and the Australia Group, are premised on the notion that one or both parties involved will be state actors. Thus, non-state transfers represent a generally unaddressed area of concern regarding weapons proliferation.
External links
- Congressional Research Service. “Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Programs: Issues for Congress.” 23 March 2001.
- Ford, Carl W. “Reducing the Threat of Chemical and Biological Weapons.” Testimony to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. 19 March 2002.
- Moodie, Michael. “International Smuggling Networks: Weapons of Mass Destruction Counterproliferation Initiatives.” Testimony to the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs. 23 June 2004.
- 'Russian Biological and Chemical Weapons.'